Conference Report – Scimat 2017

The sixth biennial Science Matters (Scimat) conference “Bettering Humanity: Secular Historic Movements” Cascais, Portugal, October 25-27, 2017. This conference is the sixth in the biennial series of Scimat conferences held in Portugal under the Scimat (Science Matters) programme, which was started ten years ago. Scimat is a new term

There are lots of negative aspects about religions and religious beliefs, but there are some good features: in particular about aspects of human behaviour. A number of years ago[1] I was at a lecture given by a catholic priest who was discussing the idea put forward by some neuroscientists that

The problem with envisaging science as the creation of “objects” is that a universe full of objects is rather a boring place. Nothing much happens unless the objects actually do something. The element of time or process in such a world is either missing or of reduced importance. We may

We all like to think of scientists as embodying the ideals of carrying out research with the highest integrity, moral standards and dedication. The overwhelming majority fit within this mould, but there are some who engage in what can only be described as scientific misconduct, even fraud. The question is

The discussion of science’s place in culture dates back to the late 1820’s. According to Richard Holmes[1], under the theme of the decline of science in Britain, there were a series of publications by John Herschel (1792 – 1871), Charles Babbage (1791 – 1871) and David Brewster (1781 – 1868).

In July 1945 Vannevar Bush, who was Director of the US Office of Scientific Research and Development submitted a report for President Roosevelt entitled “Science: The Endless Frontier” in which he recommended a big increase in science spending. His recommendations were mostly adopted by the US government and from 1950

If a child can understand quantum mechanics slightly better by hearing a poem or song then so much the better. In quantum mechanics there is the notion of complementarity: two contrasting theories or entities which are relevant to the same phenomena under different conditions. An example is the wave and

At an early stage of planning for the Pantaneto series of physics textbooks, I was at an advanced stage of negotiation with 12 authors: 8 male and 4 female. I expected that probably half of the authors would bow out for various reasons and I did, in fact, end up

Politicians, sociologists and scientists are often concerned about how the general public make decisions, either for themselves in everyday life, or collectively in elections or facing political issues. Fuzzy trace theory (FTT) developed out of the puzzling observation that in spite of more detailed information being available, people’s decisions on

Generally accepted by cosmologists is the idea that all the matter in the universe we can detect, not only at optical wavelengths but also at other wavelengths, corresponds to only about 7% of all matter. Furthermore, nobody knows what the other 93% of matter is made of – maybe the